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Journal ArticleDOI

Transparency, Price Informativeness, and Stock Return Synchronicity: Theory and Evidence

01 Oct 2010-Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis (Cambridge University Press)-Vol. 45, Iss: 5, pp 1189-1220
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that a more informative stock price today means higher return synchronicity in the future, and they find empirical support for their theoretical predictions in three settings: namely, firm age, seasoned equity offerings (SEOs), and listing of American Depositary Receipts (ADRs).
Abstract: This paper argues that, contrary to the conventional wisdom, stock return synchronicity (or R2) can increase when transparency improves. In a simple model, we show that, in more transparent environments, stock prices should be more informative about future events. Consequently, when the events actually happen in the future, there should be less “surprise” (i.e., less new information is impounded into the stock price). Thus a more informative stock price today means higher return synchronicity in the future. We find empirical support for our theoretical predictions in 3 settings: namely, firm age, seasoned equity offerings (SEOs), and listing of American Depositary Receipts (ADRs).

Summary (3 min read)

Introduction

  • This paper argues that, contrary to the conventional wisdom, stock return synchronicity (or R2) can increase when transparency improves.
  • The other is time-invariant, such as managerial quality.
  • Listing events is the main focus of their empirical exercise and the authors find strong support for it in the data.
  • First, the authors address the literature on transparency, informativeness of stock prices, and stock return synchronicity by arguing that a more transparent firm can have a higher return synchronicity, contrary to the conventional wisdom.

Theory

  • 6 Lang and Lundholm (1996) examine the relation between firms’ disclosure policies, analyst following, and the accuracy of analysts’ forecasts.
  • Here, captures market factors that are observed by all; tf t,1θ and t,2θ are firm-specific shocks.
  • Outsiders only observe t,1θ , whereas insiders observe both t,1θ and t,2θ .
  • The authors now depart from Jin and Myers (2006) by assuming that there is a change in the firm’s disclosure policy and the firm becomes more transparent.

A.1. Lumpy (One-Time) Information Disclosure

  • During SEOs or ADR listings, the firm becomes more transparent in the sense that a big chunk of information comes out that otherwise would have come out later, or perhaps not at all.
  • For simplicity of exposition, the authors make the extreme assumption that the information revealed at disclosure affects only the cash flow shock one period later, i.e. it is relevant for events that occur one period later only.
  • 0t Proposition 1(a). (i) The proportion of the realized variation in period (i.e. between and0t 0t 10 +t ) explained by market factors is higher for a firm that experience an improvement in disclosure at than one that does not.
  • The return synchronicity will increase subsequently – there is less information content to later announcements since part of the information is already impounded in the stock price.

A.2. Regular Early Disclosure of Information

  • To formalize this notion of transparency, the authors assume that at the beginning of every period, there is some disclosure that reduces the variance of the cash flow shock revealed to the public at the end of the period.
  • The result that the return synchronicity actually increases in this case may be somewhat surprising.
  • The reason is that the information revealed at the end of the period regarding the cash flow innovation still one period later is discounted relative to the information revealed at the beginning of the period, since the former is relevant for a more distant cash flow.
  • Moreover, define the information set Proof: . 8 West (1988) considers a very general framework that has a similar implication.
  • Alternatively and as the authors show in this section, it can also be associated with either early disclosure of time-varying firm specific information, or disclosure of time-invariant information about firm characteristics, which may cause return synchronicity to increase.

IV. Empirical Evidence

  • This section provides evidence consistent with the theory outlined above, in three different settings.
  • Consistent with their univariate analysis, firm age is associated with significantly higher R2 (and thus lower LSSE), at the 1% levels, reflecting learning about the time-invariant information.
  • Therefore, the authors follow Roll (1988), Piotroski and Roulstone (2004), Durnev, Morck, Yeung, and Zarowin (2003), and Durnev, Morck, and Yeung (2004) by adding industry returns in the standard market model regression.
  • Inclusion of additional risk factors do not change the age effect on return synchronicity (columns (3) and (4) of Panel A in Table 2).
  • One such setting is seasoned equity offerings (SEOs).

B.1. Empirical Specification

  • To capture the inter-temporal response of R2 around SEOs, the authors pursue a specification that imposes very little structure on the response dynamics.
  • Thus earnings smoothing would bias against their results, by raising R2 prior to ADR or SEO events.
  • Hypothesis 2 derives from the second part of Proposition (1a).16 Hypothesis 1.
  • That is, SEOs are not randomly assigned; there might be unobserved firm characteristics that simultaneously affect the SEO decisions and return synchronicity.
  • Second, the authors include firm-fixed effects in all their estimations.

B.2. Results

  • Compared to non-SEO firm-years, SEO firm-years differ in almost all firm characteristics, suggesting that firm characteristics need to be controlled for in their later analysis.
  • The impacts of other firm control variables are similar to those in Table 2.
  • Then according to their Proposition 1(b) and Proposition 2, the return synchronicity may continue to be higher.
  • Consistent with their model’s predictions, ADRs are associated with a persistent drop in firm specific information in stock prices (i.e., higher R2) in the years after the listings.
  • 21 Specifically, the authors define countries with a score above 20 We note that some firms may cross list in countries other than the U.S.the authors.

V. Conclusion

  • Existing literature has taken the perspective that if a firm’s information environment causes stock prices to reflect more firm-specific information, market factors should explain a smaller proportion of the variation in stock returns.
  • The authors empirical evidence is drawn from three different settings.
  • In particular, return synchronicity decreases prior to these events, and increases subsequently.
  • Overall, the authors make two contributions to the literature.
  • First, by showing both theoretically and empirically that stock return synchronicity can increase with improved firm transparency, the authors highlight the importance of understanding the nature of information discovery and the dynamics of response of stock return synchronicity to changes in information environment.

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Stock Return Synchronicity and the Informativeness of
Stock Prices: Theory and Evidence
1
Sudipto Dasgupta
Jie Gan
+
Ning Gao
#
JEL Classification Code: G14, G39
Keywords: Stock return synchronicity; R
2
; Firm-specific return variation; Informativeness
of stock prices; Transparency; Seasoned equity offering; Cross listing.
1
We thank Utpal Bhattacharya, Michael Brennan, Kalok Chan, Craig Doidge, Art Durnev, Robert Engle, Li Jin,
Ernst Maug, Stewart Myers, Wei Jiang, Anil Makhija, Bill Megginson, Randall Morck, Mark Seasholes, Jeremy
Stein, Martin Walker, Bernard Yeung and participants at the 2006 Financial Intermediation Research Society
Conference and the 2006 WFA Conference for helpful comments and discussions. We are grateful to Hendrik
Bessembinder (the editor) and two anonymous referees for their comments and suggestions which greatly improved
the paper.
Department of Finance, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Clear Water Bay, Kowloon, Hong
Kong. Email: dasgupta@ust.hk.
+
Department of Finance, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Clear Water Bay, Kowloon, Hong
Kong. Email: jgan@ust.hk.
#
The Manchester Accounting and Finance Group, Manchester Business School, the University of Manchester,
Booth Street West, Manchester, M15 6PB, United Kingdom. Email: ning.gao@mbs.ac.uk.
1

Stock Return Synchronicity and Informativeness of Stock
Prices: Theory and Evidence
Abstract
This paper argues that, contrary to the conventional wisdom, stock return synchronicity (or R
2
) can
increase when transparency improves. In a simple model, we show that, in more transparent
environments, stock prices should be more informative about future events. Consequently, when the
events actually happen in the future, there should be less “surprise”, i.e., there is less new information
impounded into the stock price. Thus a more informative stock price today means higher return
synchronicity in the future. We find empirical support for our theoretical predictions in three settings,
namely firm age, seasoned equity issues, and listing of ADRs.
JEL Classification Code: G14, G39
Keywords: Stock return synchronicity; R
2
; Firm-specific return variation; Informativeness
of stock prices; Transparency; Seasoned equity offering; Cross listing.
2

I. Introduction
Financial economists generally agree that in efficient markets, stock prices change to
reflect available information – either firm-specific or market-wide. Recent literature has
addressed the question of how a firm’s information environment (disclosure policy, analyst
following) or its institutional environment (property rights protection, quality of government,
legal origin) can affect the relative importance of firm-specific as opposed to market wide factors
(Jin and Myers (2006), Piotroski and Roulstone (2003), Chan and Hameed (2006), and Morck,
Yeung, and Yu (2000)). This literature has taken the perspective that if the firm’s environment
causes stock prices to aggregate more firm-specific information, market factors should explain a
smaller proportion of the variation in stock returns. In other words, the stock return synchronicity
or R
2
from a standard market model regression should be lower.
This perspective, while intuitive, is at odds with another equally intuitive implication of
market efficiency. In efficient markets, stock prices respond only to announcements that are not
already anticipated by the market. When the information environment surrounding a firm
improves and more firm-specific information is available, market participants are also able to
improve their predictions about the occurrence of future firm-specific events. As a result,
prevailing stock prices are likely to already “factor in” the likelihood of occurrence of these
events. When the events actually happen in the future, the market will not react to such news,
since there is little “surprise”. In other words, more informative stock prices today should be
associated with less firm-specific variation in stock prices in the future. Therefore, the return
synchronicity should be higher.
In this paper, we present a simple model to illustrate the point that a more transparent
information environment can lead to higher, rather than lower, stock return synchronicity. This is
3

because, for a more transparent firm, there is already more information available to market
participants, reducing the “surprise” from future announcements. In our model, we distinguish
between two types of firm-specific information. One pertains to time-varying firm
characteristics, reflecting the current state of the firm, such as next quarter’s earnings. The other
is time-invariant, such as managerial quality.
2
Stock return synchronicity can increase
subsequent to an improvement in transparency through disclosure of both types of information.
First, greater transparency can lead to early disclosure of time-variant information. This can
happen around major events such as seasoned equity issues (SEOs) or cross-listings, during
which a big chunk of information about future events is revealed. Thus when future events
actually happen, there is less “surprise” and hence less additional information to be incorporated
in the stock price, resulting in a higher return synchronicity.
3
While the positive effect of greater
transparency on return synchronicity is most significant in the case of a one-time lumpy
disclosure, we show that it also holds in the more general setting with regular, early disclosure of
information. In particular, we show that in a dynamic setting, if at the beginning of every period,
outsiders get to know (one period ahead of time) some of the information that otherwise would
come out at the end of the period, the return synchronicity is actually higher.
The second channel through which greater transparency increases stock return
synchronicity is due to learning about time-invariant firm-specific characteristics, such as
managerial quality. In particular, better disclosure allows market participants to learn about time-
invariant firm fundamentals with greater precision (e.g., in the extreme case where the
2
Strictly speaking all firm characteristics are time varying in the very long run. Here we refer to those
characteristics that do not change frequently or do not change much over time (so that they do not affect valuation
significantly) as “time-invariant.”
3
Shiller (1981) notes theoretically that if dividend news arrives in a lumpy and infrequent way, stock price volatility
becomes lower. If much of the dividend news reflects firm specific information, one would also expect return
synchronicity to become higher.
4

fundaments are completely known, there is no new learning). Therefore, with more disclosure,
the priors about these fundamentals will be revised less drastically as new information comes in.
As a result, there will be less firm-specific variation in stock prices, i.e., the return synchronicity
will be higher.
We present three pieces of empirical evidence consistent with our model’s predictions.
We first provide evidence of learning about time-invariant firm-specific information. The idea is
that, as a firm becomes older, the market learns more about its time-invariant characteristics, e.g.,
the firm’s intrinsic quality. Therefore, return synchronicity should be higher for older firms,
since more of the (time-invariant) firm-specific information is already reflected in the stock
price. This prediction is strongly supported by the data.
Second and third, we exploit the fact that the effect of greater transparency on stock
return synchronicity is likely to be especially clear when the disclosure is “lumpy”, in the sense
that the market receives a big chunk of information relevant for future cash flows. Therefore, we
focus on seasoned equity offerings (SEOs) and cross-listings in the U.S.
4
It is well known that
both events are associated with significant amounts of information disclosure and market
scrutiny (see, e.g., Almazan et al. (2002) for SEO, and Lang et al. (2003) for ADR listings). Our
model suggests a dynamic response of return synchronicity to an improvement in the information
environment. At the time when new information is disclosed and impounded into stock prices,
the firm-specific return variation will increase, as suggested by conventional wisdom. However,
since a big chunk of relevant information is already reflected in stock prices, we would expect
the firm-specific return variation of SEO and cross-listed firms to be subsequently lower. This
dynamic response of the firm-specific return variation around seasoned equity issues and cross-
4
While firms can list their shares in the U.S. exchanges either through ADRs or through direct listings, the literature
sometimes uses the two terms “cross listings” and “ADR listings” interchangeably (see, e.g., Lang, Lins, and Miller
(2003)). In the rest of this paper, we follow this convention, except when we discuss our sample.
5

Citations
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TL;DR: The authors found that short-term reversal, post-earnings drift, and momentum strategies earn similar returns in emerging and developed markets using data from 56 markets, and showed that commonly used efficiency tests can yield misleading inferences because they do not control for the information environment.
Abstract: Using data from 56 markets, we find that short-term reversal, post-earnings drift, and momentum strategies earn similar returns in emerging and developed markets. Variance ratios and market delay measures often show greater deviations from random walk pricing in developed markets. Conceptually, we show that commonly used efficiency tests can yield misleading inferences because they do not control for the information environment. Our evidence corrects misperceptions that emerging markets feature larger trading profits and higher return autocorrelation, highlights crucial limitations of weak and semi-strong form efficiency measures, and points to the importance of measuring informational aspects of efficiency. © The Author 2010. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Society for Financial Studies. All rights reserved.

479 citations


Cites background from "Transparency, Price Informativeness..."

  • ...Concerns regarding this interpretation of firm-specific idiosyncratic variance have been raised by Kelly (2007) and Dasgupta, Gan, and Gao (2009)....

    [...]

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TL;DR: The authors found that deteriorating earnings quality is associated with higher idiosyncratic return volatility over 1962-2001, and the results are robust to controlling for inter-temporal changes in the disclosure of value-relevant information, sophistication of investors and the possibility that earnings quality can be informative about future cash flows.

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TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a review of the viability of the bonding hypothesis in the context of cross-listing and argue that it may not be a good fit for many companies.

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TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that the sensitivity of corporate investment to stock price is higher for firms cross-listed in the U.S. than for firms that never cross-list.
Abstract: We show that the sensitivity of corporate investment to stock price is higher for firms cross-listed in the U.S. than for firms that never cross-list. This difference is strong, does not exist prior to the crosslisting decision, and does not vanish over time after this decision. Moreover, the impact of a U.S. cross-listing on the investment-to-price sensitivity is higher for firms that rank high on measures of governance and disclosure quality, which suggests that our finding is not exclusively driven by the improvement in corporate governance that follows a U.S cross-listing. Instead, we argue that a crosslisting enhances managers’ reliance on stock price because it makes stock prices more informative to managers. In support of this learning hypothesis, we find that the positive impact of a U.S. crosslisting on the investment-to-price sensitivity is higher when a cross-listing is more likely to stimulate trading based on information new to managers.

151 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that low-R2 stocks have characteristics that facilitate private informed trade, i.e., lower information costs and fewer impediments to arbitrage, and that differences in R2 are driven as much by firmspecific volatility on days without private news as by firm-specific volatility in days with private news.
Abstract: Reasoning that private firm-specific information causes firm-specific return variation that drives down market-model R2s, [Morck et al., 2000, The Information Content of Stock Markets: Why do Emerging Markets have Synchronous Stock Price Movements? Journal of Financial Economics, 58, 215–260] begin a large body of research which interprets R2 as an inverse measure of price informativeness. Low-R2s or "synchronicity," as it is called in this literature, signal that prices more efficiently incorporate private firm-specific information, and high R2s indicate less. For this to be true, we would expect that low-R2 stocks have characteristics that facilitate private informed trade, i.e., lower information costs and fewer impediments to arbitrage. However, in this paper we document the opposite: Low-R2 stocks are small, young, and followed by few analysts, and have high bid-ask spreads, high price impact, greater short-sale constraints and are infrequently traded. In fact, microstructure measures suggest that private-information events are less likely for low-R2 stocks than high, and that differences in R2 are driven as much by firm-specific volatility on days without private news as by firm-specific volatility on days with private news. These results call into question prior research using R2 to measure the information content of stock prices.

150 citations

References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that firms and industries with lower market model R2 statistics exhibit higher association between current returns and future earnings, indicating more information about future earnings in current stock returns.
Abstract: Roll (1988) observes low R2 statistics for common asset pricing models due to vigorousfirms-specific returns variation not associated with public information. He concludes (p. 56) that this implies â¬Seither private information or else occasional frenzy unrelated to concrete information.â¬?We show that firms and industries with lower market model R2 statistics exhibit higher association between current returns and future earnings, indicating more information about future earnings in current stock returns. This supports Rollâ¬"s first interpretation ⬠higher firms-specific returns variation as a fraction of total variation signals more information-laden stock prices and, therefore, more efficient stock markets.

674 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that firms and industries with lower market model R 2 statistics exhibit higher association between current returns and future earnings, indicating more information about future earnings in current stock returns.
Abstract: Roll [1988] observes low R 2 statistics for common asset pricing models due to vigorous firm-specific return variation not associated with public information. He concludes that this implies “either private information or else occasional frenzy unrelated to concrete information” [p. 56]. We show that firms and industries with lower market model R 2 statistics exhibit higher association between current returns and future earnings, indicating more information about future earnings in current stock returns. This supports Roll’s first interpretation: higher firm-specific return variation as a fraction of total variation signals more information-laden stock prices and, therefore, more efficient stock markets.

611 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the relationship between the stock price synchronicity and analyst activity in emerging markets and found that returns on high analyst-following portfolio lead returns on low analyst following portfolio more than vice versa.
Abstract: This paper examines the relationship between the stock price synchronicity and analyst activity in emerging markets. Contrary to conventional wisdom that suggests that security analysts specialize in the production of firm-specific information, we find that the security analysts predominantly produce market-wide information. Using the R-square statistics of the market model as a measure of the synchronicity of stock price movements, we find that more analyst coverage leads to an increase in stock price synchronicity. Furthermore, after controlling for the influence of firm size on the lead-lag relation, we find that returns on high analyst-following portfolio lead returns on low analyst-following portfolio more than vice versa. We also find that the aggregate changes in the earnings forecast of high analyst-following portfolio affect the aggregate returns of the portfolio itself as well as the the low analyst-following portfolio while the aggregate changes in the earnings forecasts of low analyst-following portfolio have no predictive ability. Finally, when the forecast dispersion is high, the effect of analyst coverage on stock price synchronicity is reduced.

586 citations


"Transparency, Price Informativeness..." refers background in this paper

  • ...Using data from emerging markets, Chan and Hameed (2006) report that greater analyst coverage increases return synchronicity....

    [...]

  • ...Using data from emerging markets, Chan and Hameed (2006) report that greater analyst coverage increases return synchronicity. Barberis, Shleifer, and Wurgler (2005) find that inclusion in (deletion from) the Standard and Poor’s (S&P) 500 index, which presumably increases (decreases) firm-level transparency, increases (decreases) a stock’s return synchronicity....

    [...]

  • ...Recent literature has addressed the question of how a firm’s information environment (disclosure policy, analyst following) or its institutional environment (property rights protection, quality of government, legal origin) affect the relative importance of firm-specific as opposed to marketwide factors (Jin and Myers (2006), Piotroski and Roulstone (2004), Chan and Hameed (2006), and Morck, Yeung, and Yu (MYY) (2000))....

    [...]

  • ...Using data from emerging markets, Chan and Hameed (2006) report that greater analyst coverage increases return synchronicity. Barberis, Shleifer, and Wurgler (2005) find that inclusion in (deletion from) the Standard and Poor’s (S&P) 500 index, which presumably increases (decreases) firm-level transparency, increases (decreases) a stock’s return synchronicity. Given these inconsistencies, it is useful to review the determinants of the market model return synchronicity. Consider a simple regression of firm return on market return. In this case, R2 = SSR/SST = β(2)Sxx/ ( β(2)Sxx + SSE ) . Thus, an increase in return synchronicity can come from 3 sources: i) an increase in marketwide return variation (Sxx), ceteris paribus; ii) a decrease in the “idiosyncratic return variation (SSE),” ceteris paribus; and iii) an increase in beta (β), or the stock’s comovement with the market, ceteris paribus. The results in MYY (2000) for country-level R2 could be primarily attributable to higher marketwide return volatility associated with weaker property rights protection (which discourages information acquisition and creates more space for noise trading); results in Jin and Myers (2006) are attributable to lower idiosyncratic return variation in countries with poor transparency. Note that at the country level, as the aggregated β is exactly 1 by definition, the country-level studies have generally associated a lower average R2 with either a higher firm-specific return variation or lower aggregate market volatility. This, however, is not the case at the firm level. The mixed results on R2 at the firm level can be reconciled by this β effect: S&P additions (Barberis et al. (2005)) or more analyst coverage (Piotroski and Roulstone (2004), Chan and Hameed (2006)) lead to an increased comovement with the market and thus the β....

    [...]

  • ...…or its institutional environment (property rights protection, quality of government, legal origin) affect the relative importance of firm-specific as opposed to marketwide factors (Jin and Myers (2006), Piotroski and Roulstone (2004), Chan and Hameed (2006), and Morck, Yeung, and Yu (MYY) (2000))....

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the relation between the stock price synchronicity and analyst activity in emerging markets and found that securities which are covered by more analysts incorporate greater (lesser) market-wide (firm-specific) information.

513 citations

Posted Content

[...]

504 citations


"Transparency, Price Informativeness..." refers background in this paper

  • ...Therefore, we follow Roll (1988), Piotroski and Roulstone (2004), and Durnev et al. (2003), (2004) by adding industry returns in the standard market model regression....

    [...]

Frequently Asked Questions (1)
Q1. What are the contributions in "Stock return synchronicity and the informativeness of stock prices: theory and evidence" ?

This paper argues that, contrary to the conventional wisdom, stock return synchronicity ( or R ) can increase when transparency improves. In a simple model, the authors show that, in more transparent environments, stock prices should be more informative about future events.